登陆注册
5188800000120

第120章 THE DISCOVERY(19)

Thomasin, being left alone, took off some of her wet garments, carried the baby upstairs to Clym's bed, and then came down to the sitting-room again, where she made a larger fire, and began drying herself.

The fire soon flared up the chimney, giving the room an appearance of comfort that was doubled by contrast with the drumming of the storm without, which snapped at the windowpanes and breathed into the chimney strange low utterances that seemed to be the prologue to some tragedy.

But the least part of Thomasin was in the house, for her heart being at ease about the little girl upstairs she was mentally following Clym on his journey.

Having indulged in this imaginary peregrination for some considerable interval, she became impressed with a sense of the intolerable slowness of time.But she sat on.

The moment then came when she could scarcely sit longer, and it was like a satire on her patience to remember that Clym could hardly have reached the inn as yet.

At last she went to the baby's bedside.The child was sleeping soundly; but her imagination of possibly disastrous events at her home, the predominance within her of the unseen over the seen, agitated her beyond endurance.

She could not refrain from going down and opening the door.

The rain still continued, the candlelight falling upon the nearest drops and making glistening darts of them as they descended across the throng of invisible ones behind.

To plunge into that medium was to plunge into water slightly diluted with air.But the difficulty of returning to her house at this moment made her all the more desirous of doing so--anything was better than suspense.

"I have come here well enough," she said, "and why shouldn't I go back again? It is a mistake for me to be away."She hastily fetched the infant, wrapped it up, cloaked herself as before, and shoveling the ashes over the fire, to prevent accidents, went into the open air.Pausing first to put the door key in its old place behind the shutter, she resolutely turned her face to the confronting pile of firmamental darkness beyond the palings, and stepped into its midst.But Thomasin's imagination being so actively engaged elsewhere, the night and the weather had for her no terror beyond that of their actual discomfort and difficulty.

She was soon ascending Blooms-End valley and traversing the undulations on the side of the hill.The noise of the wind over the heath was shrill, and as if it whistled for joy at finding a night so congenial as this.

Sometimes the path led her to hollows between thickets of tall and dripping bracken, dead, though not yet prostrate, which enclosed her like a pool.When they were more than usually tall she lifted the baby to the top of her head, that it might be out of the reach of their drenching fronds.

On higher ground, where the wind was brisk and sustained, the rain flew in a level flight without sensible descent, so that it was beyond all power to imagine the remoteness of the point at which it left the bosoms of the clouds.

Here self-defence was impossible, and individual drops stuck into her like the arrows into Saint Sebastian.

She was enabled to avoid puddles by the nebulous paleness which signified their presence, though beside anything less dark than the heath they themselves would have appeared as blackness.

Yet in spite of all this Thomasin was not sorry that she had started.To her there were not, as to Eustacia, demons in the air, and malice in every bush and bough.

The drops which lashed her face were not scorpions, but prosy rain; Egdon in the mass was no monster whatever, but impersonal open ground.Her fears of the place were rational, her dislikes of its worst moods reasonable.

At this time it was in her view a windy, wet place, in which a person might experience much discomfort, lose the path without care, and possibly catch cold.

If the path is well known the difficulty at such times of keeping therein is not altogether great, from its familiar feel to the feet; but once lost it is irrecoverable.Owing to her baby, who somewhat impeded Thomasin's view forward and distracted her mind, she did at last lose the track.This mishap occurred when she was descending an open slope about two-thirds home.

Instead of attempting, by wandering hither and thither, the hopeless task of finding such a mere thread, she went straight on, trusting for guidance to her general knowledge of the contours, which was scarcely surpassed by Clym's or by that of the heath-croppers themselves.

At length Thomasin reached a hollow and began to discern through the rain a faint blotted radiance, which presently assumed the oblong form of an open door.

She knew that no house stood hereabouts, and was soon aware of the nature of the door by its height above the ground.

"Why, it is Diggory Venn's van, surely!" she said.

A certain secluded spot near Rainbarrow was, she knew, often Venn's chosen centre when staying in this neighbourhood;and she guessed at once that she had stumbled upon this mysterious retreat.The question arose in her mind whether or not she should ask him to guide her into the path.

In her anxiety to reach home she decided that she would appeal to him, notwithstanding the strangeness of appearing before his eyes at this place and season.But when, in pursuance of this resolve, Thomasin reached the van and looked in she found it to be untenanted; though there was no doubt that it was the reddleman's.The fire was burning in the stove, the lantern hung from the nail.

Round the doorway the floor was merely sprinkled with rain, and not saturated, which told her that the door had not long been opened.

While she stood uncertainly looking in Thomasin heard a footstep advancing from the darkness behind her, and turning, beheld the well-known form in corduroy, lurid from head to foot, the lantern beams falling upon him through an intervening gauze of raindrops.

"I thought you went down the slope," he said, without noticing her face."How do you come back here again?""Diggory?" said Thomasin faintly.

同类推荐
  • 梁皇宝卷

    梁皇宝卷

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Old Fritz and the New Era

    Old Fritz and the New Era

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 剖心记

    剖心记

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 元朝典故编年考

    元朝典故编年考

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 医学源流论

    医学源流论

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 失忆100天:便宜老公将错就错

    失忆100天:便宜老公将错就错

    顾北辰接到派出所打来电话,说他的夫人跳楼自杀未遂,然后他就奇怪自己怎么就莫名巧妙多了个老婆,不过在得知他的老婆是冷秋歆,自己成了便宜老公后,他还是匆忙抛下国外的事务,在心里打着调查真相的名义,将自己失忆了的老婆绑在身边。
  • 飞扬:第十六届新概念作文90后获奖者佳作A卷

    飞扬:第十六届新概念作文90后获奖者佳作A卷

    《飞扬:第十六届新概念作文90后获奖者佳作A卷》所收录的均为第十六届新概念作文大赛90后获奖者经典佳作A卷,这些作品,字字珠玑,篇篇经典,有的空灵隽秀、质朴绵长,有的立意高远、针砭时弊,有的纵横恣肆、文采飞扬,让学生很容易就能汲取优秀作文精华,从而快速成长。通过新概念获奖者作品的学习,让学生从思想老套、素材陈旧、主题落后中成功脱颖而出。从而迅速提高自己的写作水平。对于参加中考及高考的考生来说,本书可以当做作文“圣经”。对于喜爱青春文学的青少年读者,本书也是不错的青春文学阅读经典。作者简介
  • 最真实的汉朝

    最真实的汉朝

    少年时代,刘邦认真读书,但这不是他唯一的追求,他的最高目标是做一个自由放任、潇洒如风的游侠。所以成人之后,他不断改变自己,努力做一个闻名遐迩的侠士。游侠与无赖的区别是非常大的。游侠不工作,却以声张正义为根本,得到世人的尊敬,而无赖是人人唾弃的废人。如果混淆了这一关系,那刘邦的身份必受巨大贬低。这也不符合他的历史成就。刘邦是个侠肝义胆的游侠,而非无赖。他的建国之路,就是一条游侠的发展道路。“游侠”这个定位深深地印刻的刘邦的大脑和骨骼上,甚至流淌在他的血液中。
  • 我的小骄阳

    我的小骄阳

    友情提醒:不好看,不是爽文,不是宠文。。
  • 熊氏真传少林大易筋经

    熊氏真传少林大易筋经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 公子戏江湖

    公子戏江湖

    给武侠续命——-“江湖莫远,武侠未逝。”
  • 漫山依旧

    漫山依旧

    九幽,你说世上乌鸦一般黑,可是你知不知道这世上不是只有乌鸦?怕了,这一世又一世,不敢再去争不敢再去赌,一个人也好,无忧无虑。
  • 圣帝

    圣帝

    力量,是世间本源。当一个人的力量可以打破天地间的束缚,那么就可以超脱生死,万寿无疆。等级划分:万物道、鬼神道、天地道、入圣道、圣帝。第一阶段万物道等级:横练、暴气、凝气、化始、抱元、守一、封神、归一、入神。
  • 我的右手成精了

    我的右手成精了

    “你整天这么颓废,怕是以后要跟右手结婚......”这原本是一句玩笑话,直到那天......我的右手竟然真的成精了!隔空可探物、一拳破万法!从天而降的强大异能彻底改变了我的生活,却也把我卷入了一场可怕的纷争,整个位面的命运,都渐渐被我握在了手中!
  • A CONFESSION

    A CONFESSION

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。